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WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY

CB 1088

ONE BROOKINGS DR.

ST. LOUIS, MO 63130-4899

I am an ethnographer, passionate about global travels and local eats. My teaching and research interests encompass personal experiences with transnational phenomena and professional training in cross-cultural and interethnic subjects, from human migration, to urban formations, to different cultures of consumption. At graduate school (Nagoya University, Japan), my MA and PhD theses explored first- and second-generation Chinese immigrants in Australia, particularly concerning identity and identity politics within the context of multiculturalism. Recently, I have started a project to look into the ways in which the rise of tourism and consumerism in Mainland China is transforming ethnic spaces and cultural landscapes in transnational localities.

recent courses

"Model Minority": The Asian American Experience

This course explores Asian American experience revolving around the concept of "model minority." It investigates the historical origins of "model minority" and reconsiders this concept in socio-political discourses as well as in everyday Asian American experience. This course employs multidisciplinary inquiries to examine the complexity and heterogeneity among Asian Americans. Through a wide range of topics, such as identity, race, and (pan-)ethnicity, culture and religion, gender and sexuality, masculinity and femininity, and notions of invisibility and marginalization, this course situates Asian American experiences in the broader American (and at times transnational) ethno-racial and socio-political context.

From McDonald's to K-Pop: New Movements in East Asia

This course introduces contemporary East Asian cultures and societies from transregional and transnational perspectives through the lens of consumer and popular cultures. We employ McDonald's as the first case study to look into East Asian responses to Western cultural products and ideas. For K-pop, we examine its emergence and transregional receptions and impact across different regions in East Asia as well as in the U.S. Beginning with these two subjects, our investigation extends to other examples of transregional cultural phenomena such as J-wave, Hello Kitty, "cuteness," or western holidays in East Asia. While focusing on transnational cultural movements originating in or being adapted to the East Asian context, our discussions also refer to key topics in the study of East Asian cultures such as filial piety and kinship.

First Year Seminar - Chinatown: Migration, Identity, and Space

"Chinatown," as a cultural symbol and a spatial entity, links various topics and studies in this course. Our survey starts with a historical and geographical glimpse of five Chinatowns in the US through the real life stories of their residents. This is followed by an in-depth study of Chinese restaurants and food all over the world using texts, images, and films that reveal how Chinese cuisine is inherited in and adapted to each local culture and society. The seminar culminates in a discussion of Chinese migration and settlement, the representations of identity, and the cultural and spatial constructions in particular historical and social contexts. The assignments include fieldtrips to Chinese businesses, and a debate on whether or not Olive Boulevard constitutes a Chinatown in St Louis.

Children of Immigrants: Identity and Acculturation

This seminar examines two sub-groups: child immigrants and the native-born children of immigrants. It interrogates cultural/ethnic identity, cultural adaptation, bilingualism and biculturalism, and challenges and achievements of this young generation through ethnography, literature, and sociological accounts. We aim to scrutinize the studies of the "1.5" generation and the second generation, and theories such as "segmented assimilation," across a wide range of ethnic groups, from people of East Asian origins to those with Latin American ancestries, by mainly focusing on their experiences in the United States.

Selected Publications

2018 “The Politics of Space and Identity: Making Place in a Suburban District.” In Mapping Migration, Identity, and Space, Tabea Linhard and Tomothy H. Parsons (eds.), 311-330. Palgrave Macmillan.2017 “Beyond the Ethnic Enclave: Interethnicity and Trans-spatiality in an Australian Suburb.” City&Society 29 (1): 82-103.2017 “Narrating Race and Identities from the Periphery: Diversity, Dilemma, and Discourses.” In The Crisis of Race in Higher Education: A Day of Discovery and Dialogue, William Tate IV, Nancy Staudt, and Ashley Macrander (eds.), 43-58. Bingley, UK: Emerald, 2017.2006 「チャイニーズ・アイデンティティとチャイニーズ性のゆらぎ―オーストラリアン・チャイニーズの事例をめぐって」『オーストラリア研究』2006年第20号,109-128頁(許琳玲)。

Courses

L97 IAS 135 Chinatown: Migration, Identity, and SpaceL97 IAS 3248 (U43 IS 324) Intercultural CommunicationL97 IAS 3512 “Model Minority”: The Asian American ExperienceL97 IAS 3822 From McDonald’s to K-Pop: New Movements in East AsiaL97 IAS 4036 Children of Immigrants: Identity and AcculturationL97 IAS 4062 The Art of Borrowing: The “West” in Japanese LifeU43 IS 336 Cultures and Societies in East Asia